Tuesday, December 18, 2007

One of the things I've learned in my football research is that the value of home-field advantage varies pretty widely from year to year, especially with interconference games. Because prediction systems tend to have a big bias towards the home team, this can have a large impact on accuracy. So throughout the season, I'll be keeping track of home team winning percentage and average final score margin (home team points - away team points) for interconference, interdivision, and intradivision matchups. If you're interested in that sort of thing, it can help you with betting on the spread (hint).

I am completely baffled about the divisional games, though this has regressed a little towards the mean in the last couple weeks.

No comments:

Special Content

About the Author

My degree is in computer science, and the football research started as an independent study in artificial neural networks. As a lifelong NFL fan, I wanted to explore the relative importance of different factors in winning games. Since the research is still nascent, I wanted to put it out in the public domain and hopefully find others interested in teaming up. Once it becomes profitable, though... I just hope the mafia families running Vegas don't come to hurt me.